The virtuous tax: lifesaving and crime-prevention effects of the 1991 federal alcohol-tax increase.
The last time that federal excise taxes on alcoholic beverages were increased was 1991. The changes were larger than the typical state-level changes that have been used to study price effects, but the consequences have not been assessed due to the lack of a control group. Here we develop and implement a novel method for utilizing interstate heterogeneity to estimate the aggregate effects of a federal tax increase on rates of injury fatality and crime. We provide evidence that the relative importance of alcohol in violence and injury rates is directly related to per capita consumption, and build on that finding to generate estimates. A conservative estimate is that the federal tax (which increased alcohol prices by 6% initially) reduced injury deaths by 4.5% (6480 deaths), in 1991, and had a still larger effect on violent crime.
Duke Scholars
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- Wounds and Injuries
- Violence
- United States
- Taxes
- Suicide Prevention
- Suicide
- Humans
- Homicide
- Health Policy & Services
- Crime
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Wounds and Injuries
- Violence
- United States
- Taxes
- Suicide Prevention
- Suicide
- Humans
- Homicide
- Health Policy & Services
- Crime